Skip to main content

7 things you didn’t know your Pixel phone could do

Google’s Pixel phones have long been hailed as the best way to get a stripped-back, responsive Android experience. Google offers a few different Pixel phones at different price points, but they generally fall in the midrange to “premium midrange” price bracket — and they’re among the best phones in that price bracket.

But while Pixel devices offer a near-stock Android experience, they’re not completely devoid of personality. Google has added a number of features to Pixel phones that make them easier to use and more versatile.

Recommended Videos

Interested in learning more about your Google Pixel phone? Here are seven things you didn’t know your Pixel phone could do.

Fingerprint sensor gestures

Google Pixel 5
Andrew Martonik/Digital Trends

Did you know that the fingerprint sensor on your Pixel phone can do more than just unlock your phone? In fact, it can kind of act like a tiny touch surface to help you perform certain gestures. For example, you can swipe down on the fingerprint sensor to open the notification shade. Of course, this won’t work on the Pixel 4 series, as the Pixel 4 doesn’t have a fingerprint sensor.

To enable this feature, open Settings, then head to System > Gestures. Then enable the toggle next to Swipe Fingerprint for Notifications.

Use your Pixel as a wireless charger

Google Pixel 5 charging earbuds
Google

If you have a Pixel 5, you automatically have a wireless charging pad. That’s because the Pixel 5 supports Google’s Battery Share feature, which lets you place Qi-compatible devices on its back to charge them. The feature actually turns on automatically whenever you plug a USB-C cable into the device. It’ll turn on for a short time, and then stay on and work as usual if it detects a Qi-compatible device on it — otherwise, it will turn off.

You can also manually activate Battery Share by opening the Settings app, then heading to Battery > Battery Share, and turning on the Battery Share toggle.

Always know what song is playing around you

Google is pretty smart at being able to tell what songs are playing in your environment, and if you’re someone that likes to know what songs are playing at all time, that can be helpful for you. The feature itself is called Now Playing, and if you enable it, Google will display what song is playing in your environment on the lock screen.

To enable Now Playing, open the Settings app and head to Sound & Vibration > Advanced > Now Playing.  Turn on Show Songs on Lock Screen. Your phone will then download a song database, and you’ll then automatically get information about the songs playing on your lock screen.

You can also get a full history of the songs that you’ve heard recently. So see that history, open the Settings app, then head to Sound & Vibration > Advanced > Now Playing > Now Playing History.

Check your notifications just by lifting your phone

Want to make it easier to check the notifications on your phone? If you want, you can check your notifications just by lifting your device. To enable this feature, open the Settings app, then head to System > Gestures > Lift to Check Phone, then enable the toggle.

Quickly open the camera

Want to be able to access the camera as quickly as possible? Probably the quickest way to access the camera on your Google Pixel phone is to double-tap the power button, which can be done any time you’re using the phone, whether it’s locked or not.

The feature may be enabled by default, but in case it’s not, open the Settings app, then head to System > Gestures > Quickly Open Camera, then turn the toggle on. You’ll then be able to open the camera by double-pressing the power button.

Squeeze to access Google Assistant

google assistant 2.0 pixel 4
Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

If you’re super plugged into the Google ecosystem of products, you likely use Google Assistant pretty regularly. Pixel phones make it relatively easy to access Assistant. For example, you can just use the standard “Hey Google” hotword. Or, you can swipe up from the corner of the display. Last but not least, you can squeeze the sides of your compatible phone.

To enable this feature, open the Settings app, then head to System > Gestures > Active Edge. Then, you’ll be able to enable the feature, choose the sensitivity, allow the feature to work when the screen is off, and select whether or not you want to use the same gesture to silence your device.

Screen your calls before you answer them

Call Screening Pixel 3
Julian Chokkattu/Digital Trends

Seem to get a lot of spam calls? Maybe it’s time you get an assistant to answer your calls for you. Thankfully, you don’t have to pay for an assistant though — Google Assistant can take care of it. Using this feature, Google Assistant can answer a call, and ask who’s calling and why they’re calling. Assistant will then determine if the call is a robotic call, and hang up, or if it’s a real person, after which it can ring your phone and show you the caller’s information.

It’s important to note a few things. First, you can manually use call screening when you get a call by tapping on the Screen Call button — and you don’t have to enable the feature to use it. Alternatively, you can set the feature to run automatically when you get a call from an unknown number. To do this open the Phone app, then head to the menu button on the top, tap Settings, then tap the Spam and Call Screen button. Then, tap Call Screen, and select the types of call you want to screen under Unknown Call Settings. You can then select to ring your phone, automatically screen calls and decline robocalls, or silently decline calls.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
5 phones you should buy instead of the Google Pixel 9
Someone holding the Google Pixel 9.

Fall has arrived, and the year is inching closer to its end. We now have all of the major phone releases out for 2024, with powerful phones from Google, Apple, Samsung, and more.

If you’re in the market for a new phone right now, you may be eyeing the Google Pixel 9. It’s a pretty great phone, but there are some other fantastic alternatives to consider as well. Let’s take a look at five other options to think about before you go out and buy a Pixel 9.
Google Pixel 9 Pro

Read more
Can the Google Pixel 9 Pro beat my iPhone camera? I did a test to find out
Someone holding an iPhone 15 Pro and a Pixel 9 Pro.

I’m the kind of person who takes a ton of photos, whether it’s of my pets, my daughter and her shenanigans, my husband and I, or various things at Disneyland.

I am primarily an iPhone user, currently using the iPhone 15 Pro, with which I have taken hundreds, if not thousands, of photos over the past year. However, the Pixel 9 Pro is also one of my favorite phones of 2024, and Pixels are known for their reliable cameras. As such, I wondered which device would have the better camera, the Pixel 9 Pro or the iPhone 15 Pro? And I decided to find out.
Google Pixel 9 Pro vs. iPhone 15 Pro: camera specs

Read more
How AI has quietly transformed this one camera feature on your phone
The title image for the Outtafocus column, showing the Google Pixel 9 Pro's camera.

All the latest AI camera features in the Google Pixel 9 Pro, Google Photos, and a host of other recently launched phones and devices got me thinking. I quite enjoy some of them and can’t deny the usefulness of Magic Eraser.

Still, I wonder how many will have the longevity of a camera feature I’ve watched steadily improve to become so much more exciting over the last few years, and where AI is working behind the scenes. I’m talking about our phones' telephoto and digital zoom features, where AI is a mostly silent, but critical part of the story.
Telephoto cameras on phones
Huawei Pura 70 Ultra (top left), Huawei P30 Pro, iPhone 15 Pro Max, Google Pixel 3a, Google Pixel 9 Pro, and Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra Andy Boxall / Digital Trends

Read more